wealth and investment management (wim) - wells fargo · 2018-05-10 · wells fargo 2018 investor...
TRANSCRIPT
Opening Remarks
Tim Sloan
Chief Executive Officer and President
May 10, 2018
© 2018 Wells Fargo & Company. All rights reserved.
Opening Remarks 1 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
“We want to satisfy
our customers’
financial needs and
help them succeed
financially.”
Wells Fargo Vision
Opening Remarks 2 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Five primary values guide every action we take:
Our values
What’s right for customers. We place customers at the center of everything we do. We want to exceed customer expectations and build relationships that last a lifetime.
People as a competitive advantage. We strive to attract, develop, motivate, and retain the best team members – and collaborate across businesses and functions to serve customers.
Ethics. We’re committed to the highest standards of integrity, transparency, and principled performance. We do the right thing, the right way, and hold ourselves accountable.
Diversity and inclusion. We value and promote diversity and inclusion in all aspects of business and at all levels. Success comes from inviting and incorporating diverse perspectives.
Leadership. We’re all called to be leaders. We want everyone to lead themselves, lead the team and lead the business – in service to customers, communities, team members, and shareholders.
Opening Remarks 3 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
We want to become the financial services leader in these six areas:
Our goals
Customer Service and Advice Team Member Engagement
Innovation Risk Management
Corporate Citizenship Shareholder Value
Opening Remarks 4 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Progress on our goals
Customer Service and Advice
Rolling out transformational changes to improve the customer experience in our branches
Sending low and zero balance alerts to deposit customers – ~20 million a month
Introduced Overdraft RewindSM which has helped an estimated 800,000 customers avoid overdraft charges
70% of Wealth & Investment Management affluent clients have an active financial plan(1)
Contact Center servicing satisfaction was at an all-time high in 1Q18
Customer ‘Loyalty’ branch survey scores reached their highest level in 1Q18 since August 2016
Team Member Engagement
Raised minimum hourly wage for U.S.-based team members to $15, benefitting approximately 36,000 team members
Awarded restricted share rights to approximately 250,000 team members
Introduced a new compensation plan and performance management plan in our Community Bank
Expanded our “Raise Your Hand” communications initiative
Introduced clear behavioral expectations and common leadership objectives
~97% of all candidates who received an offer in 2017 joined Wells Fargo
Team member turnover in 2017 was at its lowest level since 2013
(1) As of December 2017. Represents WIM retail clients with assets under management of $250k and above, and includes clients of the Private Client Group, Wealth Brokerage Services, Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network, Wells Fargo Advisors Solutions, and Wealth Management. An active financial plan is defined as an Envision investment plan or Wealth plan that has been presented to the client within the last 12 months.
Opening Remarks 5 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Progress on our goals
Innovation
Formed PVSI, which has accelerated the pace of innovation
Rolled out card-free access to ~13,000 ATMs and ~8,000 ATMs have mobile wallet access
Launched Predictive Banking, providing personalized insights and guidance
Named one of only twelve companies to participate in Apple Business Chat beta
10% of completed retail mortgage applications were done through our new online mortgage application in March 2018
Named #1 in consumer mobile banking(1)
Named best corporate/institutional digital bank(2)
Piloting Control TowerSM; rolling out GreenhouseSM in 2018
Risk Management
Formed Conduct Management Office
Centralized core functions including Risk, Human Resources, and Finance
Enhanced Board oversight of risk management, including compliance and operational risk
Continued disciplined focus on credit and market risk
Identified specific talent needs and externally hired a head of Regulatory Relations, a Chief Compliance Officer and a Chief Operational Risk Officer
Hired external talent to strengthen capabilities including more than 2,000 new external team members in risk management in 2016 and 2017
Implementing a new risk management operating model
(1) 1Q18 Dynatrace #1 overall in Mobile Banking Scorecard. (2) Global Finance 2017.
Opening Remarks 6 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Progress on our goals
Corporate Citizenship
Targeting an increase of ~40% in our annual donations to nonprofit and community organizations in 2018
Announced $185 billion multi-year commitments in support of African American and Hispanic home ownership
New $200 billion commitment in financing to sustainable businesses and projects
Ranked first cash contributor among financial institutions and third among all U.S. companies in 2016 by The Chronicle of Philanthropy
Team members volunteered two million hours in their communities in 2017
For the 9th consecutive year, rated by United Way Worldwide as the largest U.S. workplace giving campaign
Shareholder Value
Return on equity of 11.35%, return on average tangible common equity(1) of 13.55% in 2017
Total 1-year shareholder return of 13.2% in 2017
Balance sheet reflects strong asset quality, liquidity and capital
Divesting businesses that no longer meet our return requirements and/or future investment spending requirements
Remain committed to our target of $4 billion of expense reductions by the end of 2019
Returned $14.5 billion to shareholders through common stock dividends and net share repurchases in 2017, up 16% from 2016
(1) Tangible common equity (ROTCE) is a non-GAAP financial measure and represents total equity less preferred equity, noncontrolling interests, and goodwill and certain identifiable intangible assets (including goodwill and intangible assets associated with certain of our nonmarketable equity securities but excluding mortgage servicing rights), net of applicable deferred taxes. The methodology of determining tangible common equity may differ among companies. Management believes that return on average tangible common equity, which utilizes tangible common equity, is a useful financial measure because it enables investors and others to assess the Company's use of equity. For additional information, including a corresponding reconciliation to GAAP financial measures see page 19.
Opening Remarks 7 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Rebuilding trust
Our top priority remains rebuilding the trust of our shareholders, customers, team members, communities, and regulators
Making things right for customers
- We continue to look across the company to identify areas or instances where customers may have experienced financial harm and make things right
Fixing problems
- Implementing fundamental changes to our business model, structure, and practices
Building a better bank
- Examining our practices and processes, working to address issues, and taking steps to ensure they never happen again, while being transparent with our stakeholders
- Our continued progress on our six goals, including innovation, will strengthen Wells Fargo and benefit all of our stakeholders
Our Opportunity
Opening Remarks 9 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Large and diversified financial services provider
1.5B teller and ATM transactions
$212B residential
mortgage loan originations
$30B commercial card
spend
9.4B credit card and debit card transactions
$105.8T wire transfers
$1.6T residential mortgage servicing portfolio
5.9B digital sessions (mobile
and desktop)
$1.9T WIM total client assets
5.3B ACH transactions originated
2017 full-year volume or year-end balances.
Opening Remarks 10 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Over 70 million consumer and small business customers
Payment, Virtual Solutions and Innovation
Community Banking/ Consumer Lending
Wealth and Investment Management
0.9mm
0.2mm
45.3mm 11.5mm
2.3mm
8.4mm
2.4mm
Opening Remarks 11 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Opportunity to grow within our existing customer base
66%
57% 55%
56% Auto
Small Business Mortgage
Consumer Deposits
Many of our customers have only one relationship with Wells Fargo
Student Lending Investments 53% 42%
Opening Remarks 12 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Evolving our customer centric approach
Creating solutions that help our customers live better
lives
Delivering products that best fit our capabilities
Offering products through the channels that work best
for us
Striving to meet our customers’ needs wherever
they are
Using unique experiences as a means to deliver select
offerings
Enabling exceptional experiences that are
universally simple and convenient
From To
Similar value propositions for all customer segments
Enhanced and differentiated to ensure we meet the
unique needs that matter most
Opening Remarks 13 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Engine of economic growth
Majority also have a personal relationship with Wells Fargo
Focus on making it easier to manage finances and achieve goals
Our approach to consumers is becoming more targeted
Mass
Student
Emerging Affluent
Affluent
High Net Worth
Small Business
Drives volume and scale as the largest segment
Priority on elevating the baseline experience
Focus on simple and intuitive digital experiences in all channels
Basis for future affluent relationships
Offer education, guidance and solutions to help them achieve goals
Maximize progression opportunities from student
Establishes a foundation for life-long relationships
Build on strong parental relationships
Helps students achieve financial independence
Growing population with complex multi-generational needs
Well-positioned to meet needs through the breadth and depth of our services
Focus on deepening relationships and wallet share
Strong revenue with opportunity to attract assets held elsewhere
Emphasis on providing relevant and personalized advice
Create exceptional experience regardless of channel and needs
Using a segment-focused approach consistent across our businesses
Opening Remarks 14 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Consumer strategy – elevating the baseline experience
Relevant and personalized financial
advice
Simple and intuitive digital and cross-
channel experiences
Timely issue resolution
Optimized offerings with transparent
pricing
Intuitive Investor®
Predictive Banking
Shared Customer Relationship Management platform
Card-free ATMs
Merchant Services digital application
GreenhouseSM by Wells Fargo
Overdraft RewindSM and zero balance alerts
Real-time fraud detection
Key Takeaways
Opening Remarks 16 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Building from a strong foundation
Diversified Business Model
Industry Leading Distribution
Technology and Innovation
Large Customer Base
Valuable Deposit Franchise
Broad Product Set at Scale
Strong Credit Discipline
Consistent Returns
Strong Capital
70+ million customers Serving one in three U.S. households
28.8 million digital active customers as of February 2018 #1 in consumer mobile banking(1)
Branches in more states and ~2x as many markets as peers Over 13,000 card-free ATMs
Revenue: 56% net interest income and 44% noninterest income Loan portfolio: 53% commercial and 47% consumer
#1 in retail deposits(2)
$1.3 trillion in average deposits at 34 bps in 1Q18
$391 billion credit and debit card purchase volume Largest lender in the U.S.
Net charge-offs of 0.31% NPAs have declined for eight consecutive quarters through 1Q18
Over $21 billion in earnings for five straight years 1.15% ROA, 11.35% ROE and 13.55% ROTCE(3)
Common Equity Tier 1 ratio (fully phased-in) of 11.9% in 1Q18(4)
Returned $14.5 billion to shareholders, up 16% from 2016
All data is for full year 2017, unless noted. (1) 1Q18 Dynatrace #1 overall Mobile Bank Scorecard. (2) FDIC data, SNL Financial, as of June 2017. Retail deposit data is pro forma for acquisitions and caps deposits at $1 billion in a single banking branch and excludes credit union deposits. (3) Tangible common equity is a non-GAAP financial measure and represents total equity less preferred equity, noncontrolling interests, and goodwill and certain identifiable intangible assets (including goodwill and intangible assets associated with certain of our nonmarketable equity securities but excluding mortgage servicing rights), net of applicable deferred taxes. The methodology of determining tangible common equity may differ among companies. Management believes that return on average tangible common equity, which utilizes tangible common equity, is a useful financial measure because it enables investors and others to assess the Company's use of equity. For additional information, including a corresponding reconciliation to GAAP financial measures see page 19. (4) Fully phased-in capital ratios are calculated assuming the full phase-in of the Basel III capital rules. See page 20 for additional information regarding capital ratios.
Outstanding Team
Over 260,000 dedicated team members Team member turnover in 2017 was at its lowest since 2013
Opening Remarks 17 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Optimistic about the future of Wells Fargo
1
2
3
We are making progress in resolving the issues that are resulting in near-term headwinds
We are evolving with our customers’ preferences, including an accelerated pace of innovation
Our fundamental business model is still intact and we can generate strong returns while becoming more efficient
Appendix
Opening Remarks 19 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Return on average tangible common equity (ROTCE)
Wells Fargo & Company and Subsidiaries
TANGIBLE COMMON EQUITY (1)
Year ended
(in millions, except ratios) Dec 31,
2017
Dec 31,
2016
Return on average tangible common equity (1): Net income applicable to common stock (A) 20,554 20,373
Average total equity 205,654 200,690
Adjustments:
Preferred stock (25,592 ) (24,363 )
Additional paid-in capital on ESOP preferred stock (139 ) (161 )
Unearned ESOP shares 2,143 2,011
Noncontrolling interests (948 ) (936 )
Average common stockholders’ equity (B) 181,118 177,241
Adjustments:
Goodwill (26,629 ) (26,700 )
Certain identifiable intangible assets (other than MSRs) (2,176 ) (3,254 )
Other assets (2) (2,184 ) (2,117 )
Applicable deferred taxes (3) 1,570 1,897
Average tangible common equity (C) 151,699 147,067
Return on average common stockholders' equity (ROE) (annualized) (A)/(B) 11.35 11.49
Return on average tangible common equity (ROTCE) (annualized) (A)/(C) 13.55 13.85
(1) Tangible common equity is a non-GAAP financial measure and represents total equity less preferred equity, noncontrolling interests, and goodwill and certain identifiable
intangible assets (including goodwill and intangible assets associated with certain of our nonmarketable equity securities but excluding mortgage servicing rights), net of
applicable deferred taxes. The methodology of determining tangible common equity may differ among companies. Management believes that return on average tangible
common equity, which utilizes tangible common equity, is a useful financial measure because it enables investors and others to assess the Company's use of equity.
(2) Represents goodwill and other intangibles on nonmarketable equity securities, which are included in other assets.
(3) Applicable deferred taxes relate to goodwill and other intangible assets. They were determined by applying the combined federal statutory rate and composite state income
tax rates to the difference between book and tax basis of the respective goodwill and intangible assets at period end.
Financial Overview 20 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Common Equity Tier 1 (Fully Phased-In)
Wells Fargo & Company and Subsidiaries
COMMON EQUITY TIER 1 UNDER BASEL III (FULLY PHASED-IN) (1)
(in billions, except ratio) Mar 31,
2018
Dec 31,
2017
Sep 30,
2017
Jun 30,
2017
Mar 31,
2017
Total equity $ 205.9 208.1 206.6 205.9 202.3
Adjustments: Preferred stock (26.2 ) (25.4 ) (25.6 ) (25.8 ) (25.5 )
Additional paid-in capital on ESOP preferred stock (0.1 ) (0.1 ) (0.1 ) (0.1 ) (0.2 )
Unearned ESOP shares 2.6 1.7 1.9 2.1 2.5 Noncontrolling interests (1.0 ) (1.1 ) (0.9 ) (0.9 ) (1.0 )
Total common stockholders' equity 181.2 183.2 181.9 181.2 178.1
Adjustments: Goodwill (26.4 ) (26.6 ) (26.6 ) (26.6 ) (26.7 )
Certain identifiable intangible assets (other than MSRs)
(1.4 ) (1.6 ) (1.9 ) (2.1 ) (2.4 )
Other assets (2) (2.4 ) (2.2 ) (2.3 ) (2.2 ) (2.1 )
Applicable deferred taxes (3) 0.9 1.0 1.6 1.6 1.7 Investment in certain subsidiaries and other 0.4 0.2 (0.1 ) (0.2 ) (0.1 )
Common Equity Tier 1 (Fully Phased-In)
under Basel III (A) 152.3
154.0
152.6
151.7
148.5
Total risk-weighted assets (RWAs) under Basel III (4) (B) $ 1,278.1 1,285.6 1,292.8 1,310.5 1,324.5
Common Equity Tier 1 to total RWAs under Basel III (Fully Phased-In) (A)/(B) 11.9 % 12.0
11.8
11.6
11.2
(1) Basel III capital rules, adopted by the Federal Reserve Board on July 2, 2013, revised the definition of capital, increased minimum capital ratios, and introduced a minimum
Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio. The rules are being phased in through the end of 2021. Fully phased-in capital amounts, ratios and RWAs are calculated assuming the
full phase-in of the Basel III capital rules. Beginning January 1, 2018, the requirements for calculating CET1 and tier 1 capital, along with RWAs, were fully phased-in.
(2) Represents goodwill and other intangibles on nonmarketable equity securities, which are included in other assets.
(3) Applicable deferred taxes relate to goodwill and other intangible assets. They were determined by applying the combined federal statutory rate and composite state income
tax rates to the difference between book and tax basis of the respective goodwill and intangible assets at period end.
(4) The final Basel III capital rules provide for two capital frameworks: the Standardized Approach, which replaced Basel I, and the Advanced Approach applicable to certain
institutions. Under the final rules, we are subject to the lower of our CET1 ratio calculated under the Standardized Approach and under the Advanced Approach in the
assessment of our capital adequacy. The capital ratio for March 31, 2018 and December 31, September 30, June 30 and March 31, 2017, was calculated under the Basel
III Standardized Approach RWAs.
Biography
Opening Remarks 22 Wells Fargo 2018 Investor Day
Timothy (Tim) J. Sloan was elected chief executive officer of Wells Fargo & Company and a member of the Board of Directors in October 2016. He became president and chief operating officer in November 2015.
A 30-year company veteran, Tim had led the company’s Wholesale Banking business beginning in 2014 — overseeing approximately 50 different businesses, including Capital Markets, Commercial (middle market) Banking, Commercial Real Estate, Asset Backed Finance, Equipment Finance, Corporate Banking, Insurance, International, Investment Banking, and Treasury Management.
Prior to that, he served as Wells Fargo’s chief financial officer, responsible for financial management functions including controllers, financial reporting, asset liability management, treasury, investor relations, and investment portfolios. From September 2010 to February 2011, Tim served as chief administrative officer and managed Corporate Communications, Corporate Social Responsibility, Enterprise Marketing, Government Relations, and Corporate Human Resources.
From 1991 to 2010, Tim held various leadership roles in Wholesale Banking, including head of Commercial Banking, Real Estate, and Specialized Financial Services. Prior to joining Wells Fargo in the Loan Adjustment Group in 1987, he worked for Continental Illinois Bank in Chicago.
Tim earned his B.A. in economics and history and his M.B.A. in finance and accounting, both from the University of Michigan–Ann Arbor.
Tim Sloan Chief Executive Officer and President